Hi,
Let's say I load 4 molecules, A, B, C, & D. A and B are a heterodimer
pair, as are C and D. I'd like to move/rotate A and B together,
maintaining their respective orientations, while holding C and D fixed
(e.g., manually overlaying dimer structures). =20
=20
How do I do this? I might have hit on the appropriate combination of
protecting/freezing/creating objects/etc. once, but can't seem to repeat
the routine. =20
=20
Thanks for any tips,
David Horita
-----------------------------=20
David A. Horita, Ph.D.
Department of Biochemistry
Wake Forest University School of Medicine
Winston-Salem, NC 27157-1016=20
Tel: 336 713-4194
Fax: 336 716-7671=20
email: dhorita@...
web: http://www.wfubmc.edu/biochem/faculty/Horita/
=20

I find maximizing the screen with the green button works fine with virtual
desktops and has the added merit of keeping the title bar menu items
accessible. I wish there was a way of making that the default behavior
(I seem to remember that it used to be).
HTH,
Bill

Hi,
I have problem to open pymol in my notebook, can anybody give me a
hand and help out?
I bought my notebook two and a half years ago, never gave me any trouble before.
However, After I downloaded the pymol, and installed it. I cant open
it, I kept get error message saying that " can not create openGL
context, program exits" .
I notebook is Dell inspiron 8200, with Intel pentium 4, 256RM of RAM,
the graphc card is nVIDIA, and using Gefore2, which already has openGL
component, and it is enable.
Since I cant get my pymol to work, I even get a new version of the
driver, but I still can open pymol.
Is anybody have any idea how can I fix the problem?
Thanks,
Yongli